Thursday, June 21, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-World stocks, oil down after weak factory data

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-World stocks, oil down after weak factory data
Jun 21st 2012, 15:52

Thu Jun 21, 2012 11:52am EDT

  * Global stocks down more than 1.0 pct on China, Europe and  US data      * Oil falls; Brent at lowest since December 2010      * Spain's borrowing costs rise          By Caroline Valetkevitch      NEW YORK, June 21 (Reuters) - Stocks on major markets fell  and crude oil prices slumped $2 a barrel on Thursday after data  showed Chinese, European and U.S. manufacturing activity slowing  further, just a day after the Federal Reserve extended its  monetary stimulus program.      The U.S. dollar rose against the euro and yen as the Fed's  move disappointed investors who had hoped it would opt for a  more aggressive policy.      Business activity across the euro zone shrank for a fifth  straight month in June and Chinese manufacturing contracted,  while weaker overseas demand slowed U.S. factory growth, surveys  showed on Thursday.      The data darkened the outlook for the world economy, adding  to fears that Europe's debt crisis and slower growth in the  United States and Asia would cause downturns around the globe.      "The genesis is Europe and it's starting to flow through  everything now. Business has slowed down," said Stephen  Massocca, managing director at Wedbush Morgan in San Francisco.          The Dow Jones industrial average was down 76.67  points, or 0.60 percent, at 12,747.72. The Standard & Poor's 500  Index was down 11.53 points, or 0.85 percent, at  1,344.16. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 30.04  points, or 1.03 percent, at 2,900.41.       MSCI's global equity index declined 1.2  percent, with European shares was down 0.4 percent.      The Fed on Wednesday chose to extend its bond-buying  program, dubbed "Operation Twist", rather than implement more  quantitative easing as some had hoped.      The U.S. central bank made its decision after lowering  growth and employment forecasts for the world's largest economy  in 2012 and 2013. It said it would consider more stimulus  measures if the situation worsened.       In Europe, preliminary manufacturing and service sector data  across the 17-nation euro area showed the downturn in the region  was becoming entrenched as falling new orders and rising  unemployment hit business confidence.       The survey data also showed that Germany's private sector  shrank in June for the second month running, with manufacturing  activity hitting a three-year low.      A similar survey of private sector activity in China,  compiled by HSBC, found its factory sector had shrunk for an  eighth straight month in June on weaker demand for exports.      Economic growth in the world's most populous nation is  widely expected to have slowed for a sixth straight quarter in  April through June as the country feels the impact of the euro  area debt crisis and property controls weigh on domestic demand.      In the oil market, Brent crude was down to $90.67 a  barrel, off $2.02 from Wedneday's settlement. U.S. crude traded  down $2 to $79.45 a barrel.       The U.S. dollar index, a measure of the greenback's  performance against a basket of currencies, rose 0.3 percent to  81.859.                 Spain's financial problems were also undermining confidence  in the financial markets.      The country's medium-term borrowing costs spiralled to a  euro-era record at an auction on Thursday.      Spanish bond yields were down. Ten-year Spanish government  bond yields were 23 basis points lower at 6.53  percent, having risen to almost 7.30 percent last week.      In the U.S., bond yields were down as well. Benchmark  10-year Treasuries were last up 11/32 in price to  yield 1.62 percent, down from 1.65 percent late on   Wednesday.  
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